Improved Android Emulation with Genymotion

If you have been developing Android apps for some time and have been using the default emulator, then you know how frustratingly slow it can be. Even on a powerful machine, it is manageable at best. The emulator is not only slow in booting up, but on all subsequent runs of your app. A solution to this was AndroVM which provided an Android VM client for VirtualBox. This resulted in an emulator that was noticeably faster than the default Android emulator.

AndroVM was bought by Genymobile and they released Genymotion which is a commercial product that improves on AndroVM.

The Genymotion emulator uses x86 architecture virtualization and OpenGL hardware acceleration which makes running your apps more efficient. It works by creating a virtual machine through VirtualBox to deliver an Android emulator with support for hardware sensors such as GPS, accelerometer and battery. It is available for Windows, Mac and Linux. You can get it for free and it has a premium license which adds more features to the emulator. For a list of these, take a look at this list. For general testing, the free version is sufficient.

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To download, create an account on the Genymotion website. When you log in you will be directed to a download page where you download an installer for your machine. For Mac and Linux, you will need to first install Oracle VirtualBox. The Windows installer includes the VirtualBox dependency so you won’t need to install it manually. For installation instructions for your particular development environment, check out this page. When installing VirtualBox, ensure you have VirtualBox Networking enabled.For the Mac install, make sure to drag both Genymotion and Genymotion Shell to the Applications folder.

After installing, launch the Genymotion application to open the main Genymotion window where you can see a list of virtual devices, add new devices and configure settings.

Since this is your first install, you won’t have any virtual devices listed or be logged in as shown in the above image.

To add a device, click on the Add button. You will be prompted to log in to discover available virtual devices. After signing in, you will be shown a list of available devices, which you can filter by Android version or device model. At time of writing this article, the highest version number is Android 5.0 preview running on a Nexus 5.

The virtual device will be downloaded and once the download is complete, the device will be listed in the main Genymotion window. Below is a list of my downloaded virtual devices (I added a few more to the list).

To launch the device, select it and press Start. Notice the time it takes to boot up and compare it to the default emulator.

The virtual device looks similar to the default emulator except for the controls on its right. These are used for the various sensors Genymotion offers. The image below shows the difference between the free version and paid version of a device. On the free version, some of the sensor controls are disabled.

From the top, the controls are:

Battery – Offers the ability to test your app under different battery conditions.

GPS – Use this to set different locations for your device and test Geolocation functionality of your apps.

Camera – Sets the front and back cameras of the virtual device. If your computer has a webcam, you can use this. You can also set a dummy webcam to be used which shows a blank view with a moving Genymotion icon.

Capture – Enables you to take screenshots or screencasts of the virtual device. This is useful for recording your app in use.

Remote Control – Enables you to take control of a virtual device from another physical device (running Android 2.2 or above). An attached physical device will forward touch inputs and accelerometer events to Genymotion. Thus, you can test your app as if you were holding a device in your hands.

Identifiers – Shows Device ID and Android ID numbers. You can view and edit these values at any time, without having to reboot the virtual device.

Network – Enables you to test how an app reacts with different types of network qualities.

Increase Volume

Decrease Volume

Rotate Screen

Pixel Perfect – Enables high precision of your user interface and ensures every pixel of your app looks as it should. One pixel of the virtual device is displayed using one pixel of your computer screen.

Eclipse and Android Studio Integration

To use a Genymotion virtual device during development, launch the device and when you run your app in your chosen IDE, the virtual device will be listed in the list of available devices.

If you don’t want to launch Genymotion every time you want to use its devices, install the Genymotion plugin that is available for both Eclipse and Android Studio.

For Eclipse, open Help -> Install New Software , click on the Add button to add a new Update Site. Give it the name Genymotion and url of http://plugins.genymotion.com/eclipse/. Click Ok and then in the Available Software window, select Genymobile from the list and click on Next. Follow the prompts until installation is complete. Eclipse will need to restart.

On restarting Eclipse, you will notice an icon for the Genymotion Virtual Device Manager.

Launch the Genymotion Virtual Device Manager. This is similar to the default device manager where you can see a list of your devices and start them. If you select New from the manager, it will open Genymotion, as you can’t create a device from here. To run a device, click on Start after selecting the device from the list and the device will launch without needing to have Genymotion running.

When a Genymotion virtual device is running, it will be among the list of devices you can run your app on when you run the application.

Note: This is a bug that started appearing on Mac OSX Yosemite. When you chose to run your app on a device, thus launching the Android Device Chooser, as shown above. You might not see the running Genymotion device listed as available. A simple fix is to resize the serial number tab and you will see the genymotion emulator that is running.

For Android Studio, open Settings. This is different for different OS’s. For Mac, it’s Android Studio -> Preferences. In the window that appears, under IDE Settings, select Plugins. Click on Browse repositories button and search for Genymotion. Select Genymotion from the search results and click on the Install Plugin button. After installation, Android Studio will restart.

On restarting, the Genymotion Virtual Device Manager icon will have been added to the toolbar.

On clicking the icon, you will be prompted to set the path to the Genymotion application. For Mac, this should be /Applications/Genymotion.app. After setting the path you will now be able to launch the device manager.

On running your app, the running Genymotion virtual device will be among the choices of devices you can run your app on.

Extra Features worth Mentioning

Personally, because of its speed, I prefer using Genymotion over the default emulator. But there are a couple more features it provides that I really like. First is the ease of installing an apk file. With the default emulator, there are several steps you have to go through to run an apk file on the device, with Genymotion, you simply drag and drop the file to the virtual device.

The second feature is actually a feature that Genymotion doesn’t support anymore. Previous Genymotion versions supported Google apps, which meant that you could install apps from the Google play store on the virtual device just as you would on a real device. This could come in handy when researching features to include in your app by looking at how various apps implemented the features. You could install apps on different virtual devices, thus test the app on phones and tablets without needing to purchase a variety of real testing devices.